430 



INDEX. 



Overbury, Sir T. poisoned in the Tower, 

 vii. 387 ; murder of, 1613, vi. 184. 



Owen, Mr., charge against for high 

 treason, vi. 172 ; supplement to Sir 

 Francis Bacon s speech in the King s 

 Bench against, vii. 397 ; his case, 

 vii. 405. 



Oxidrakes, in India, ordnance known 

 in that city, i. 192. 



Oysters, Colchester, fattened by fresh 

 water, iv. 371. 



PACE the bitter fool s answer to Queen 

 Elizabeth, i. 351. 



Padua, its recovery and defence justi 

 fied, v. 241. 



Paget, lady, her answer to Elizabeth, i. 

 405. 



Paintings of the body, iv. 390. 



Painting, a painter may make a better 

 face than ever was, i. 145. 



Pain, resistance of, iv. 377. 



Pallas armed, the fable of her birth 

 containeth a secret of empire, i. 69. 



Palace, description of a perfect one, i. 

 149. 



Palatinate, despair of recovering it by 

 treaty, v. 224 ; recovery of it a just 

 ground of war with Spain, v. 238. 



Paleness, cause of, iv. 378. 



Pan, or nature, iii. 11 ; his beard and 

 hair depicting beams or influence of 

 celestial bodies, iii. 15 ; his horns 

 depicting a pyramid, iii. 15 ; his en 

 signs denoting harmony and empire, 

 iii. 16. 



Pan s marriage with echo, iii. 21. 



Pan, his cloak representing the stars, iii. 

 17 ; his hunting describing progres 

 sion, iii. 17 ; his wrestling with cu- 

 pid, iii. 20 ; his catching Typhon in 

 a net, nature overcoming the ele 

 ments, iii. 20 ; his finding Ceres, de 

 picting inventions the work of chance, 

 iii. 20. 



Pantomimi imitate the voice, iv. 125. 



Panama, the land enterprise of, ill 

 measured, v. 276. 



Papists, more knotted in dependence 

 towards Spain and among them 

 selves, v. 254 ; the true reason of the 

 severe laws against, v. 255. 



Paper, experiment on chambletting of, 

 iv. 392. 



Parables, use of, iii. 5. 



Parable, of Jotham, vi. 16 j the gates 

 of sleep, ii. 255. 



Paracelsus, his school of natural magic, 

 ii, 172; on mercury and sulphur, 

 vi. 175. 



Paradise, man s work in was contem 

 plation, ii. 55 : birds of, feetless, vi. 

 15. 



Paradoxes, represented by the fable of 

 echo, iii. 21 ; Christian, vii. 21. 



Pardons, revision of grants of, vii. 

 251. 



Parents and children, essay of, i. 21. 



Paris, his judgment for beauty before 

 wisdom, ii. 88. 



Paris, valour of the English at the sub 

 urbs of, v. 276. 



Parisatis poisoning one side of a knife, 

 vi. 205. 



Parks for animals, ii. 368. 



Parliament, the perfection of monarchy, 

 vi. 70 ; mode of marshalling busi 

 ness in, vi. 73 ; of the united king 

 dom, four considerations of, v. 32 ; 

 how to be looked on, vi. 17 ; when 

 controlled by the common law, vii. 

 373 ; liberty of, vi. 39. 



Parliaments, use of, vi. 420 ; several, 

 one of the internal points of separa 

 tion with Scotland, v. 30. 



Parma, Duke of, assists Don John of 

 Austria, at Rimenant, v. 258 ; a 

 strong army ready under his conduct 

 to join the Spanish Armada, v, 263 ; 

 allegation that he delayed coming to 

 join the Armada, a pretence of the 

 Spaniards, v. 265 ; the assailant at 

 the battle of Newport, v.272. 



Parmenides, his opinions of unity, ii. 

 139. 



Parmenides tenet concerning cold, iv. 

 45. 



Parrots imitate sounds, iv. 124. 



Partitions of knowledge, rule in the, ii. 

 153. 



Parry, a cunning traitor, the evasion 

 he had prepared for his treason, v. 

 293. 



Passion, fable of Dionysius, iii. 64 ; no 

 affectation in, i. 133. 



Passions of the mind, impressions they 

 make on the body, iv. 376. 



Passive good, ii. 229. 



Passive, resistance in quantity of, vii. 

 203. 



Patents, letter to the king from Lord 

 Chancellor Bacon touching, vii. 451 . 



Pater Patriae, vi. 3. 



Patrimony of the church, vi. 411. 



Patience, ii. 169. 



Pawlet s, Sir Amyas, saying respecting 

 haste, i. 368. 



Peace, among nations an empty name, 

 v. 247 ; effect of, in fruitful king 

 doms, v. 173 ; disposition to, vi. 



